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BWAPI for OpenBW

This is a fork of BWAPI which allows the use of OpenBW as a backend for BWAPI. The BWAPI version is 4.2.0.

This fork has significant changes and it no longer works with regular StarCraft: Brood War. Support for OpenBW should eventually be merged into the official BWAPI, but this fork will exist until then.

This is a development version, and breaking changes can occur at any time (that goes for OpenBW itself too).

build & install

Clone the openbw/openbw and openbw/bwapi repositories. OpenBW does not (yet) need to be built seperately (it will be built as part of the BWAPI build process). BWAPI can be built with CMake.

The OPENBW_DIR cmake variable need to be set to the path of the openbw code.

On linux, the following commands would work.

git clone https://github.com/openbw/openbw
git clone https://github.com/openbw/bwapi
cd bwapi
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DOPENBW_DIR=../../openbw -DOPENBW_ENABLE_UI=1
make

make install would probably install BWAPI into /usr/local. This can be changed with the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX variable, eg cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DOPENBW_DIR=../../openbw -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/username/bwapi.

I probably recommend just using it from the build folder, for now.

If you are using Visual Studio, then Visual Studio 2017 will most likely be required. Generate Visual Studio project files with CMake, do not any existing project files from the source tree.

By default, OpenBW will be built with no support for a graphical user interface, however it can be enabled with the OPENBW_ENABLE_UI cmake option (like above). If this option is enabled, then SDL2 must also be available. The UI can be disabled either by setting environment variable OPENBW_ENABLE_UI=0 or calling Broodwar->setGUI(false).

Compiling/linking your bot

If you installed, BWAPI.h (and the rest) will be in the include folder, otherwise they're found in bwapi/bwapi/include in the source tree.

On Windows, you should link to BWAPILIB.lib (not BWAPI.lib, this is different from regular BWAPI).

On Linux, you don't really need to link to anything, but you can -lBWAPILIB if you want.

Running

The main executable is BWAPILauncher. Running BWAPILauncher is the functional equivalent of starting StarCraft & BWAPI via an injector on Windows.

OpenBW needs the usual 3 mpq files in the working directory when it starts (Stardat.mpq, Broodat.mpq and Patch_rt.mpq). These can be copied from StarCraft: BroodWar 1.16.1 or 1.18, or you can just start BWAPILauncher from the StarCraft directory.

BWAPI loads its configuration from bwapi-data/bwapi.ini as usual. See https://github.com/bwapi/bwapi/wiki/Configuration.

the image below outlines the directory structure and required files to run OpenBW:

directory structure

OpenBW has no built-in computer player, so in single player games the opponent does not peform any actions.

Keep in mind that BWAPI configuration settings can be set through environment variables, so one can for instance run

BWAPI_CONFIG_AI__AI=/path/to/my/bot.so BWAPI_CONFIG_AUTO_MENU__RACE=Zerg BWAPILauncher

In general BWAPILauncher has no console output unless there is an error.

Multiplayer

Multiplayer games are supported, but playing together with StarCraft: Brood War clients is currently not possible.

Only 1v1 games are supported. More than two clients can not connect together.

The map (in bwapi.ini) must be the same on both clients, otherwise each player will load a different map and things will break.

Multiplayer is enabled as usual by setting auto_menu=LAN in bwapi.ini (or through environment variable), but the lan_mode setting is not used. Instead, the OPENBW_LAN_MODE environment variable is read.

The possible settings for OPENBW_LAN_MODE is TCP, LOCAL, LOCAL_AUTO, FILE or FD. On Windows only TCP is supported, though :)

The default is LOCAL_AUTO (except on Windows, where it is TCP)

The variables mentioned below are environment variables.

TCP

Uses TCP/IP for networking. By default it will bind to 0.0.0.0 and listen on port 6112, and connect to 127.0.0.1 on the same port.

OPENBW_TCP_LISTEN_HOSTNAME and OPENBW_TCP_LISTEN_PORT can be set to change the interface and port that it listens on. OPENBW_TCP_CONNECT_HOSTNAME and OPENBW_TCP_CONNECT_PORT can be set to change the hostname and port that it tries to connect to.

There are no errors if it fails to bind or connect.

LOCAL

Uses local sockets for interprocess communication.

OPENBW_LOCAL_PATH - the path to the socket file to use. If it exists, then it attempts to connect, otherwise it will create the file and listen on it. One of the clients has to listen, so when starting two clients, the file should not already exist.

LOCAL_AUTO

Listens on a unique socket file in /tmp/openbw and tries to connect to other sockets in that directory. It will automatically remove any unused sockets.

OPENBW_LOCAL_AUTO_DIRECTORY can be used to change the directory that it uses.

FILE

OPENBW_FILE_READ is the file to read from, and OPENBW_FILE_WRITE is the file to write to. The files should be pipe (FIFO) files or something like that.

FD

Same as FILE, but OPENBW_FD_READ and OPENBW_FD_WRITE can be used to specify file descriptors instead of file paths.

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